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I Forge Iron

Cheapest side draft hood I have seen yet!


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So I was working on designing a side draft hood for my mobile forge and came up with this. I spend under $2 on the bucket and aluminum duct, cut a big hole in the bucket and cut out an opening in the side and here you go. It just sits on the table and you can fine tune its location to whatever you like. Even used the piece I cut out as a sort of adjustable overhang. And I gotta say it works really well. So all you out there that are in my position of limited time money and resources here is an idea for you.

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Oh, and just in case anyone's wondering..... and you never really know with people nowadays....

 

You don't want to use a plastic 5gal bucket for the "hood".  Trust me, it won't work as well as you might like!

 

BB, as I said before, I think it's great.  Of course, now that I'm looking at it, I wonder how it might be dressed up to become more than just a metal pail.  I keep thinking back to Jesse James' forge hood and how he's got it really tricked out.

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Thanks everybody, the only problem with it so far is that its kinda top heavy and if you get a decently strong gust of wind it wants to fall over. So I think I'm going to have to rig something to hold it down to the table. I have some small diameter cable laying around so maybe rig it with a spring and some eye bolts to the table or side rail of the forge.

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"Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery."

 

I only had a 3 ft piece of chimney lying around and we always have lots of empty paint tins.

 

The result were very good.

 

A bit windy today, so there were some smoke blown sideways but at periods all the smoke went up. I am now very keen on a decent chimney, I never thought it would make such a difference.

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Excellent side draft hood! Even a piece of stove pipe suspended a few inches off the table a little behind or beside the fire will work surprisingly well.

 

I'm very much a functional is beautiful guy and that's a BEAUT.

 

Well done.

 

Frosty The Lucky.

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  • 5 months later...

Very interesting idea. The five gallon bucket would overwhelm my little Buffalo Forge pictured here but then we move down the tread and I find one from a paint can. Now that is a more doable size. Then I'm thinking maybe a 10" high shield running horizontally about a third of the way around the fire pan to add that wind protection and this may work really well. Also that "wind skirt" rived to the can would add some stability to this side draft chimney. Something to build and try.

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For us that have to work outside it's like a BBQ, no matter where you stand the smoke comes toward you.

Thanks,

Lisa

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With respect to the post vise set up, I know a fella that welded a 2X3 foot section of 3/8 plate on the bottom so when he was working on the vise, he was standing on the platform which helped to hold the vise in position as well.

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The five gallon bucket would overwhelm my little Buffalo Forge pictured here


Fill your forge with fuel. Your running it way too lean from my experience.

You may want to try to reverse the rim to see which side works better as a forge.

 

Your chimney is suggested to be 10-12 inches in diameter. That can be the inside shell of an old hot water tank, 5 gallon buckets welded together, or even a sheet of roofing tin rolled into a tube and screwed or riveted together.  Secure the bottom and top so it does not slide out or topple over. The idea is to get the smoke out of the work zone.

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Glenn

Posted Today, 02:56 PM

 

...

You may want to try to reverse the rim to see which side works better as a forge.

 ...

I believe she cut the other side off of that rim, so she'd need to cut up a second rim... or maybe weld a strip of 1/8" flat around the edge of the rim she has in there to raise the edges to a better height?

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